Fortified wines – sherry and port
There may be more - keep asking supermarkets and other suppliers but this was all we could find currently!Cockburns: Vintage Port; Quintas dos Canais Vintage PortFonseca: Forty Year Old Aged Tawny Port; Quinta do Panescal; Single Quinta Vintage Port; Classic Vintage Port; Guimaraens Vintage Port; Late Bottled Vintage PortHarvey’s Bristol CreamWaitrose: Waitrose Amontillado; Waitrose Fino only

Spirits
Most spirits are vegan but not advocaat, which contains eggs

WineViva! Wine Club can supply most of your alcohol needs – not just wine – delivered straight to your door!

Asda: marks its own-label wines.Brown Brothers: it varies! www.brownbrothers.com.au/uploads/veganapril2011.pdf – contact them for a more current listCo-op: see Co-op beer and cider. But everything that is vegan will be labelled. If it isn't, it's not vegan!Majestic: has a vegan list www.majestic.co.uk/find/Vegan-is-VeganM&S: marks its own wines if suitable, as with all their boozeOxford Landing: all of its range from 2008 vintage onwards is veganSainsbury’s: marks its own-label winesTesco: as Sainsbury’s. Their wine website only lists four vegan wines but they actually sell many more. Read the labels and ask customer services. (And if you have the energy, keep phoning/emailing until they give in and update their website!)Waitrose: see the link for a vegan listYellow Tail: all red (the white uses gelatine)Independents: most independents know their stuff and should be able to tell you what is suitable

Why would booze not be vegan?! Well, it all depends on what manufacturers use to fine (clarify) a product.
For a complete list of vegan booze, check the mighty and world-wide www.barnivore.com or ‘The Animal-free Shopper’ guide – and if you find a new vegan booze product, please contact them.
In addition, most major wine retailers: Tesco; Sainsbury's; Waitrose; Majestic etc all now carry a vegan search option. I would personally recommend Majestic, whose staff are really helpful, very well-trained and will guide you to your own personal stash of vegan wine heaven. Independent wine shops are usually good sources of wine. You might pay a little more than a bottle of supermarket plonk but these folk know their wine, know their suppliers and increasingly offer labels on their vegan and veggie wines.

Beware:

albumen (egg)

casein (milk protein)

gelatine (animal bones)

isinglass (fish bladder)

Does organic mean it is vegan? No! The grapes/hops/apples etc might be OK but that doesn’t mean the fining agent is animal-free.
Bentonite? Yes - it's a mineral.

And... some manufacturers don’t fine their wines at all, making life easier!